OVERRATED: Instagram

Lionel Bonaventure / AFPGetty Images

Like a visual Twitter for shutterbugs, the photo app has earned a big enough profile to be referenced on "Saturday Night Live" and tapped by celebrities as a way to remain in the public eye. But with a hastily walked-back terms-of-use update that would've allowed users and their photos to show up in ads, the service showed the kind of disregard for privacy that only its owner  Facebook  could love.

Like a visual Twitter for shutterbugs, the photo app has earned a big enough profile to be referenced on "Saturday Night Live" and tapped by celebrities as a way to remain in the public eye. But with a hastily walked-back terms-of-use update that would've allowed users and their photos to show up in ads, the service showed the kind of disregard for privacy that only its owner  Facebook  could love. (Lionel Bonaventure / AFPGetty Images)

Like a visual Twitter for shutterbugs, the photo app has earned a big enough profile to be referenced on "Saturday Night Live" and tapped by celebrities as a way to remain in the public eye. But with a hastily walked-back terms-of-use update that would've allowed users and their photos to show up in ads, the service showed the kind of disregard for privacy that only its owner  Facebook  could love.